Wozniak Jeffrey R, Fuglestad Anita J, Eckerle Judith K, Fink Birgit A, Hoecker Heather L, Boys Christopher J, Radke Joshua P, Kroupina Maria G, Miller Neely C, Brearley Ann M, Zeisel Steven H, Georgieff Michael K
Department of Psychiatry,
Department of Psychiatry.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2015 Nov;102(5):1113-25. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.114.099168. Epub 2015 Oct 7.
Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs) are conditions characterized by physical anomalies, neurodevelopmental abnormalities, and neurocognitive deficits, including intellectual, executive, and memory deficits. There are no specific biological treatments for FASDs, but rodent models have shown that prenatal or postnatal choline supplementation reduces cognitive and behavioral deficits. Potential mechanisms include phospholipid production for axonal growth and myelination, acetylcholine enhancement, and epigenetic effects.
Our primary goal was to determine whether postnatal choline supplementation has the potential to improve neurocognitive functioning, particularly hippocampal-dependent memory, in children with FASDs.
The study was a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot trial in children (aged 2.5-5 y at enrollment) with FASDs (n = 60) who received 500 mg choline or a placebo daily for 9 mo. Outcome measures were Mullen Scales of Early Learning (primary) and the elicited imitation (EI) memory paradigm (secondary).
The administration proved feasible, and choline was well tolerated. Participants received a dose on 88% of enrolled days. The only adverse event linked to choline was a fishy body odor. Choline supplementation improved the secondary outcome (EI) only after immediate recall performance was controlled for, and the outcome was moderated by age. The treatment effect on EI items recalled was significant in the younger participants (2.5- to ≤4.0-y-olds); the young choline group showed an increase of 12-14 percentage points greater than that of the young placebo group on delayed recall measures during treatment. However, there was a marginal baseline difference in delayed item recall between the young choline and placebo groups as well as a potential ceiling effect for item recall, both of which likely contributed to the observed treatment effect. We also observed a trend toward a negative effect of choline supplementation on the immediate EI recall of ordered pairs; the young placebo group showed an increase of 8-17 percentage points greater than that of the choline group during treatment. There was an inverse relation between choline dose (in mg/kg) and memory improvement (P = 0.041); the data suggest that weight-adjusted doses may be a better alternative to a fixed dose in future studies. Limitations included trend-level baseline differences in performance, the post-hoc determination of age moderation, and potential ceiling effects for the memory measure.
This pilot study suggests that an additional evaluation of choline supplementation as an intervention for memory functioning in children with FASDs is warranted. The observed interaction between age and choline's effect on EI suggests that potential sensitive periods should be considered in future work. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01149538.
胎儿酒精谱系障碍(FASDs)的特征是身体异常、神经发育异常和神经认知缺陷,包括智力、执行功能和记忆缺陷。目前尚无针对FASDs的特异性生物学治疗方法,但啮齿动物模型显示,产前或产后补充胆碱可减少认知和行为缺陷。潜在机制包括用于轴突生长和髓鞘形成的磷脂生成、乙酰胆碱增强以及表观遗传效应。
我们的主要目标是确定产后补充胆碱是否有可能改善FASDs患儿的神经认知功能,尤其是海马体依赖的记忆。
该研究是一项双盲、随机、安慰剂对照的试点试验,研究对象为60名FASDs患儿(入组时年龄为2.5 - 5岁),他们每天接受500毫克胆碱或安慰剂,持续9个月。主要观察指标为早期学习的Mullen量表(主要指标)和引发模仿(EI)记忆范式(次要指标)。
该给药方案可行,胆碱耐受性良好。参与者在88%的入组天数中接受了给药。与胆碱相关的唯一不良事件是身体有鱼腥味。仅在对即时回忆表现进行控制后,补充胆碱改善了次要观察指标(EI),且该结果受年龄影响。在较年轻的参与者(2.5岁至≤4.0岁)中,补充胆碱对EI项目回忆的治疗效果显著;在治疗期间的延迟回忆测量中,年轻的胆碱组比年轻的安慰剂组的增加幅度高12 - 14个百分点。然而,年轻的胆碱组和安慰剂组在延迟项目回忆方面基线存在微小差异,且项目回忆可能存在潜在的天花板效应,这两者可能共同导致了观察到的治疗效果。我们还观察到补充胆碱对有序对的即时EI回忆有负面影响的趋势;在治疗期间,年轻的安慰剂组比胆碱组的增加幅度高8 - 17个百分点。胆碱剂量(毫克/千克)与记忆改善之间存在负相关关系(P = 0.041);数据表明,在未来研究中,根据体重调整剂量可能比固定剂量是更好的选择。局限性包括表现方面的趋势水平基线差异、年龄调节的事后确定以及记忆测量的潜在天花板效应。
这项试点研究表明,有必要对补充胆碱作为FASDs患儿记忆功能干预措施进行进一步评估。观察到的年龄与胆碱对EI影响之间的相互作用表明,在未来的研究中应考虑潜在的敏感期。该试验已在clinicaltrials.gov注册,注册号为NCT01149538。